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Architecture of Chicago

Chicago is the third largest city in the United States with a population of 2,886,251 (2002). The name Chicago comes from "Checagou" (Chick-Ah-Goo-Ah) or "Checaguar" which in the language of the Potawatomi Indians means 'wild onions' or 'skunk'. The area was so named because of the smell of rotting marshland onions that used to cover it.

Chicago was first settled by Europeans when Jean Baptiste Point du Sable, an African American from Haiti, settled on the Chicago River. In 1795, the area of Chicago was ceded by the Native Americans in the Treaty of Greenville to the United States for a military post. In 1803, Fort Dearborn was built and remained in use until 1837 except between 1812 and 1816 when it was destroyed in the Fort Dearborn Massacre dring the War of 1812.

In 1871, most of the city burned in the Great Chicago Fire. By this time the city had grown to a population of over 300,000. As a result of the fire much of the city needed be rebuilt, this gave city planners a clean slate to fix the problems of the past. In the following years, Chicago architecture would become influential throughout the world because of this. The first skyscraper in the world was constructed in 1885 using novel steel skeleton construction. [ More on the history of Chicago ] [ Views of the city ]

Area
Illinois Institute of Technology
Oak Park

Date Architect Building
1869 W. W. Boyington Old Water Tower
1893-1916 Sheply, Rutan and Coolidge Art Institute of Chicago
1904 D.H. Burnham & Company Santa Fe Building
1910-11 D.H. Burnham & Company People's Gas Building
1920-22 D.H. Burnham & Company Wrigley Building
1922-25 Hood and Howells Chicago Tribune Tower
1924 Jarvis Hunt Lake Shore Center
1927 Giaver Dinkelberg Thielbar and Fugard 35 East Wacker Drive
1927-29 Walter W. Ahlschlager Hotel Intercontinental
1927-29 Holabird and Root Palmolive Building
1949-1951 Ludwig Mies van der Rohe 860-880 Lake Shore Drive
1953-56 Ludwig Mies van der Rohe 900-910 Lake Shore Drive
1957 Naess & Murphy Chicago Sun Times
1960-62 Bertrand Goldberg Marina City
1965-69 Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP John Hancock Center
1969-71 Ludwig Mies van der Rohe IBM Building
1970-73 Edward Durell Stone & Associates Aon Center
1971-73 Solomon, Cordwell, Buenz and Associates Elysées Condominiums
1972-74 Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP Sears Tower
1983 Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP One Magnificent Mile
1983-84 A. Epstein and Sons International, Inc. Smurfit-Stone Building
1985 Fujikawa Johnson & Associates Michigan Plaza South
1986 Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP Olympia Centre
1987-89 Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates 900 North Michigan
1988-90 Loebl Schlossman & Hackl Two Prudential Plaza
1989 Kevin Roche John Dinkeloo & Associates Leo Burnett Building
1990-92 Ricardo Bofill R.R. Donnelley Building
1998-2000 Lucien Lagrange & Associates Park Tower
2003- Frank O. Gehry Millenium Park Bandstand